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Samarium–neodymium dating

Samarium–neodymium dating is a radiometric dating method useful for determining the ages of rocks and meteorites, based on the alpha decay of the long-lived samarium isotope (147
Sm
) to the stable radiogenic neodymium isotope (143
Nd
). Neodymium isotope ratios together with samarium-neodymium ratios are used to provide information on the age and source of igneous melts. It is sometimes assumed that at the moment when crustal material is formed from the mantle the neodymium isotope ratio depends only on the time when this event occurred, but thereafter it evolves in a way that depends on the new ratio of samarium to neodymium in the crustal material, which will be different from the ratio in the mantle material. Samarium–neodymium dating allows us to determine when the crustal material was formed.

The usefulness of Sm–Nd dating stems from the fact that these two elements are rare earth elements and are thus, theoretically, not particularly susceptible to partitioning during sedimentation and diagenesis.[1] Fractional crystallisation of felsic minerals changes the Sm/Nd ratio of the resultant materials. This, in turn, influences the rate at which the 143Nd/144Nd ratio increases due to production of radiogenic 143Nd.

In many cases, Sm–Nd and Rb–Sr isotope data are used together.

Sm–Nd radiometric dating edit

Samarium has five naturally occurring isotopes, and neodymium has seven. The two elements are joined in a parent–daughter relationship by the alpha decay of parent 147Sm to radiogenic daughter 143Nd with a half-life of 1.06×1011 years and by the alpha decay of 146Sm (an almost-extinct radionuclide with a half-life of 1.03(5)×108 years[a]) to produce 142Nd.

To find the date at which a rock (or group of rocks) formed one can use the method of isochron dating.[6] The Sm-Nd isochron plots the ratio of radiogenic 143Nd to non-radiogenic 144Nd against the ratio of the parent isotope 147Sm to the non-radiogenic isotope 144Nd. 144Nd is used to normalize the radiogenic isotope in the isochron because it is a stable and relatively abundant neodymium isotope.

The Sm-Nd isochron is defined by the following equation:

 

where:

t is the age of the sample,
λ is the decay constant of 147Sm,
(eλt−1) is the slope of the isochron which defines the age of the system.

Alternatively, one can assume that the material formed from mantle material which was following the same path of evolution of these ratios as chondrites, and then again the time of formation can be calculated (see #The CHUR model).[6][1]

Sm and Nd geochemistry edit

The concentration of Sm and Nd in silicate minerals increase with the order in which they crystallise from a magma according to Bowen's reaction series. Samarium is accommodated more easily into mafic minerals, so a mafic rock which crystallises mafic minerals will concentrate neodymium in the melt phase relative to samarium. Thus, as a melt undergoes fractional crystallization from a mafic to a more felsic composition, the abundance of Sm and Nd changes, as does the ratio between Sm and Nd.

Thus, ultramafic rocks have high Sm and low Nd and therefore high Sm/Nd ratios. Felsic rocks have low concentrations of Sm and high Nd and therefore low Sm/Nd ratios (for example komatiite has 1.14 parts per million (ppm) Sm and 3.59 ppm Nd versus 4.65 ppm Sm and 21.6 ppm Nd in rhyolite).

The importance of this process is apparent in modeling the age of continental crust formation.

The CHUR model edit

Through the analysis of isotopic compositions of neodymium, DePaolo and Wasserburg (1976[6]) discovered that terrestrial igneous rocks at the time of their formation from melts closely followed the "chondritic uniform reservoir" or "chondritic unifractionated reservoir" (CHUR) line – the way the 143Nd:144Nd ratio increased with time in chondrites. Chondritic meteorites are thought to represent the earliest (unsorted) material that formed in the Solar system before planets formed. They have relatively homogeneous trace-element signatures, and therefore their isotopic evolution can model the evolution of the whole Solar system and of the "bulk Earth". After plotting the ages and initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios of terrestrial igneous rocks on a Nd evolution vs. time diagram, DePaolo and Wasserburg determined that Archean rocks had initial Nd isotope ratios very similar to that defined by the CHUR evolution line.

Epsilon notation edit

Since 143Nd/144Nd departures from the CHUR evolution line are very small, DePaolo and Wasserburg argued that it would be useful to create a form of notation that described 143Nd/144Nd in terms of their deviations from the CHUR evolution line. This is called the epsilon notation, whereby one epsilon unit represents a one part per 10,000 deviation from the CHUR composition.[7] Algebraically, epsilon units can be defined by the equation

 

Since epsilon units are finer and therefore a more tangible representation of the initial Nd isotope ratio, by using these instead of the initial isotopic ratios, it is easier to comprehend and therefore compare initial ratios of crust with different ages. In addition, epsilon units will normalize the initial ratios to CHUR, thus eliminating any effects caused by various analytical mass fractionation correction methods applied.[7]

Nd model ages edit

Since CHUR defines initial ratios of continental rocks through time, it was deduced that measurements of 143Nd/144Nd and 147Sm/144Nd, with the use of CHUR, could produce model ages for the segregation from the mantle of the melt that formed any crustal rock. This has been termed TCHUR.[1] In order for a TCHUR age to be calculated, fractionation between Nd/Sm would have to have occurred during magma extraction from the mantle to produce a continental rock. This fractionation would then cause a deviation between the crustal and mantle isotopic evolution lines. The intersection between these two evolution lines then indicates the crustal formation age. The TCHUR age is defined by the following equation:

 

The TCHUR age of a rock can yield a formation age for the crust as a whole if the sample has not suffered disturbance after its formation. Since Sm/Nd are rare-earth elements (REE), their characterisity enables theitic immobile ratios to resist partitioning during metamorphism and melting of silicate rocks. This therefore allows crustal formation ages to be calculated, despite any metamorphism the sample has undergone.

The depleted-mantle model edit

 
Graph to show the depleted-mantle model of DePaolo (1981)

Despite the good fit of Archean plutons to the CHUR Nd isotope evolution line, DePaolo and Wasserburg (1976) observed that the majority of young oceanic volcanics (Mid Ocean Ridge basalts and Island Arc basalts) lay +7 to +12 ɛ units above the CHUR line (see figure). This led to the realization that Archean continental igneous rocks that plotted within the error of the CHUR line could instead lie on a depleted-mantle evolution line characterized by increasing Sm/Nd and 143Nd/144Nd ratios over time. To further analyze this gap between the Archean CHUR data and the young volcanic samples, a study was conducted on the Proterozoic metamorphic basement of the Colorado Front Ranges (the Idaho Springs Formation).[8] The initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios of the samples analyzed are plotted on a ɛNd versus time diagram shown in the figure. DePaolo (1981) fitted a quadratic curve to the Idaho Springs and average ɛNd for the modern oceanic island arc data, thus representing the neodymium isotope evolution of a depleted reservoir. The composition of the depleted reservoir relative to the CHUR evolution line, at time T, is given by the equation

ɛNd(T) = 0.25 T2 – 3 T + 8.5.

Sm-Nd model ages calculated using this curve are denoted as TDM ages. DePaolo (1981) argued that these TDM model ages would yield a more accurate age for crustal formation ages than TCHUR model ages – for example, an anomalously low TCHUR model age of 0.8 Gy from McCulloch and Wasserburg's Grenville composite was revised to a TDM age of 1.3 Gy, typical for juvenile crust formation during the Grenville orogeny.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The value 6.8(7)×107 years was also in use between 2012 and 2023.[2][3][4][5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c McCulloch, M. T.; Wasserburg, G. J. (1978). "Sm-Nd and Rb-Sr Chronology of Continental Crust Formation". Science. 200 (4345): 1003–11. Bibcode:1978Sci...200.1003M. doi:10.1126/science.200.4345.1003. PMID 17740673. S2CID 40675318.
  2. ^ Kinoshita, N.; Paul, M.; Kashiv, Y.; Collon, P.; Deibel, C. M.; DiGiovine, B.; Greene, J. P.; Henderson, D. J.; Jiang, C. L.; Marley, S. T.; Nakanishi, T.; Pardo, R. C.; Rehm, K. E.; Robertson, D.; Scott, R.; Schmitt, C.; Tang, X. D.; Vondrasek, R.; Yokoyama, A. (30 March 2012). "A Shorter 146Sm Half-Life Measured and Implications for 146Sm-142Nd Chronology in the Solar System". Science. 335 (6076): 1614–1617. arXiv:1109.4805. Bibcode:2012Sci...335.1614K. doi:10.1126/science.1215510. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 22461609. S2CID 206538240.
  3. ^ Villa, I.M.; Holden, N.E.; Possolo, A.; Ickert, R.B.; Hibbert, D.B.; Renne, P.R. (September 2020). "IUPAC-IUGS recommendation on the half-lives of 147Sm and 146Sm". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 285: 70–77. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2020.06.022. ISSN 0016-7037.
  4. ^ Kinoshita, N.; Paul, M.; Kashiv, Y.; Collon, P.; Deibel, C. M.; DiGiovine, B.; Greene, J. P.; Jiang, C. L.; Marley, S. T.; Pardo, R. C.; Rehm, K. E.; Robertson, D.; Scott, R.; Schmitt, C.; Tang, X. D.; Vondrasek, R.; Yokoyama, A. (30 March 2023). "Retraction". Science. 379 (6639): 1307. doi:10.1126/science.adh7739.
  5. ^ Joelving, Frederik (30 March 2023). "One small error for a physicist, one giant blunder for planetary science". Retraction Watch. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  6. ^ a b c Depaolo, D. J.; Wasserburg, G. J. (1976). "Nd isotopic variations and petrogenetic models" (PDF). Geophysical Research Letters. 3 (5): 249. Bibcode:1976GeoRL...3..249D. doi:10.1029/GL003i005p00249.
  7. ^ a b Dickin, A. P., 2005. Radiogenic Isotope Geology, 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-82316-1 pp. 76–77.
  8. ^ DePaolo, D. J. (1981). Neodymium isotopes in the Colorado Front Range and crust – mantle evolution in the Proterozoic. Nature 291, 193–197.

External links edit

  • Geochronology and Isotopes Data Portal

samarium, neodymium, dating, radiometric, dating, method, useful, determining, ages, rocks, meteorites, based, alpha, decay, long, lived, samarium, isotope, stable, radiogenic, neodymium, isotope, neodymium, isotope, ratios, together, with, samarium, neodymium. Samarium neodymium dating is a radiometric dating method useful for determining the ages of rocks and meteorites based on the alpha decay of the long lived samarium isotope 147 Sm to the stable radiogenic neodymium isotope 143 Nd Neodymium isotope ratios together with samarium neodymium ratios are used to provide information on the age and source of igneous melts It is sometimes assumed that at the moment when crustal material is formed from the mantle the neodymium isotope ratio depends only on the time when this event occurred but thereafter it evolves in a way that depends on the new ratio of samarium to neodymium in the crustal material which will be different from the ratio in the mantle material Samarium neodymium dating allows us to determine when the crustal material was formed The usefulness of Sm Nd dating stems from the fact that these two elements are rare earth elements and are thus theoretically not particularly susceptible to partitioning during sedimentation and diagenesis 1 Fractional crystallisation of felsic minerals changes the Sm Nd ratio of the resultant materials This in turn influences the rate at which the 143Nd 144Nd ratio increases due to production of radiogenic 143Nd In many cases Sm Nd and Rb Sr isotope data are used together Contents 1 Sm Nd radiometric dating 2 Sm and Nd geochemistry 3 The CHUR model 3 1 Epsilon notation 3 2 Nd model ages 4 The depleted mantle model 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksSm Nd radiometric dating editSamarium has five naturally occurring isotopes and neodymium has seven The two elements are joined in a parent daughter relationship by the alpha decay of parent 147Sm to radiogenic daughter 143Nd with a half life of 1 06 1011 years and by the alpha decay of 146Sm an almost extinct radionuclide with a half life of 1 03 5 108 years a to produce 142Nd To find the date at which a rock or group of rocks formed one can use the method of isochron dating 6 The Sm Nd isochron plots the ratio of radiogenic 143Nd to non radiogenic 144Nd against the ratio of the parent isotope 147Sm to the non radiogenic isotope 144Nd 144Nd is used to normalize the radiogenic isotope in the isochron because it is a stable and relatively abundant neodymium isotope The Sm Nd isochron is defined by the following equation 143 N d 144 N d p r e s e n t 143 N d 144 N d i n i t i a l 147 S m 144 N d e l t 1 displaystyle left frac 143 mathrm Nd 144 mathrm Nd right mathrm present left frac 143 mathrm Nd 144 mathrm Nd right mathrm initial left frac 147 mathrm Sm 144 mathrm Nd right cdot e lambda t 1 nbsp where t is the age of the sample l is the decay constant of 147Sm elt 1 is the slope of the isochron which defines the age of the system Alternatively one can assume that the material formed from mantle material which was following the same path of evolution of these ratios as chondrites and then again the time of formation can be calculated see The CHUR model 6 1 Sm and Nd geochemistry editThe concentration of Sm and Nd in silicate minerals increase with the order in which they crystallise from a magma according to Bowen s reaction series Samarium is accommodated more easily into mafic minerals so a mafic rock which crystallises mafic minerals will concentrate neodymium in the melt phase relative to samarium Thus as a melt undergoes fractional crystallization from a mafic to a more felsic composition the abundance of Sm and Nd changes as does the ratio between Sm and Nd Thus ultramafic rocks have high Sm and low Nd and therefore high Sm Nd ratios Felsic rocks have low concentrations of Sm and high Nd and therefore low Sm Nd ratios for example komatiite has 1 14 parts per million ppm Sm and 3 59 ppm Nd versus 4 65 ppm Sm and 21 6 ppm Nd in rhyolite The importance of this process is apparent in modeling the age of continental crust formation The CHUR model editThrough the analysis of isotopic compositions of neodymium DePaolo and Wasserburg 1976 6 discovered that terrestrial igneous rocks at the time of their formation from melts closely followed the chondritic uniform reservoir or chondritic unifractionated reservoir CHUR line the way the 143Nd 144Nd ratio increased with time in chondrites Chondritic meteorites are thought to represent the earliest unsorted material that formed in the Solar system before planets formed They have relatively homogeneous trace element signatures and therefore their isotopic evolution can model the evolution of the whole Solar system and of the bulk Earth After plotting the ages and initial 143Nd 144Nd ratios of terrestrial igneous rocks on a Nd evolution vs time diagram DePaolo and Wasserburg determined that Archean rocks had initial Nd isotope ratios very similar to that defined by the CHUR evolution line Epsilon notation edit Since 143Nd 144Nd departures from the CHUR evolution line are very small DePaolo and Wasserburg argued that it would be useful to create a form of notation that described 143Nd 144Nd in terms of their deviations from the CHUR evolution line This is called the epsilon notation whereby one epsilon unit represents a one part per 10 000 deviation from the CHUR composition 7 Algebraically epsilon units can be defined by the equation e Nd t 143 Nd 144 Nd sample t 143 Nd 144 Nd CHUR t 1 10 000 displaystyle varepsilon text Nd t left frac left frac 143 text Nd 144 text Nd right text sample t left frac 143 text Nd 144 text Nd right text CHUR t 1 right times 10 000 nbsp Since epsilon units are finer and therefore a more tangible representation of the initial Nd isotope ratio by using these instead of the initial isotopic ratios it is easier to comprehend and therefore compare initial ratios of crust with different ages In addition epsilon units will normalize the initial ratios to CHUR thus eliminating any effects caused by various analytical mass fractionation correction methods applied 7 Nd model ages edit Since CHUR defines initial ratios of continental rocks through time it was deduced that measurements of 143Nd 144Nd and 147Sm 144Nd with the use of CHUR could produce model ages for the segregation from the mantle of the melt that formed any crustal rock This has been termed TCHUR 1 In order for a TCHUR age to be calculated fractionation between Nd Sm would have to have occurred during magma extraction from the mantle to produce a continental rock This fractionation would then cause a deviation between the crustal and mantle isotopic evolution lines The intersection between these two evolution lines then indicates the crustal formation age The TCHUR age is defined by the following equation T CHUR 1 l ln 1 143 Nd 144 Nd sample 143 Nd 144 Nd CHUR 147 Sm 144 Nd sample 147 Sm 144 Nd CHUR displaystyle T text CHUR left frac 1 lambda right ln left 1 frac left frac 143 text Nd 144 text Nd right text sample left frac 143 text Nd 144 text Nd right text CHUR left frac 147 text Sm 144 text Nd right text sample left frac 147 text Sm 144 text Nd right text CHUR right nbsp The TCHUR age of a rock can yield a formation age for the crust as a whole if the sample has not suffered disturbance after its formation Since Sm Nd are rare earth elements REE their characterisity enables theitic immobile ratios to resist partitioning during metamorphism and melting of silicate rocks This therefore allows crustal formation ages to be calculated despite any metamorphism the sample has undergone The depleted mantle model edit nbsp Graph to show the depleted mantle model of DePaolo 1981 Despite the good fit of Archean plutons to the CHUR Nd isotope evolution line DePaolo and Wasserburg 1976 observed that the majority of young oceanic volcanics Mid Ocean Ridge basalts and Island Arc basalts lay 7 to 12 ɛ units above the CHUR line see figure This led to the realization that Archean continental igneous rocks that plotted within the error of the CHUR line could instead lie on a depleted mantle evolution line characterized by increasing Sm Nd and 143Nd 144Nd ratios over time To further analyze this gap between the Archean CHUR data and the young volcanic samples a study was conducted on the Proterozoic metamorphic basement of the Colorado Front Ranges the Idaho Springs Formation 8 The initial 143Nd 144Nd ratios of the samples analyzed are plotted on a ɛNd versus time diagram shown in the figure DePaolo 1981 fitted a quadratic curve to the Idaho Springs and average ɛNd for the modern oceanic island arc data thus representing the neodymium isotope evolution of a depleted reservoir The composition of the depleted reservoir relative to the CHUR evolution line at time T is given by the equation ɛNd T 0 25 T2 3 T 8 5 Sm Nd model ages calculated using this curve are denoted as TDM ages DePaolo 1981 argued that these TDM model ages would yield a more accurate age for crustal formation ages than TCHUR model ages for example an anomalously low TCHUR model age of 0 8 Gy from McCulloch and Wasserburg s Grenville composite was revised to a TDM age of 1 3 Gy typical for juvenile crust formation during the Grenville orogeny See also editRadiometric datingNotes edit The value 6 8 7 107 years was also in use between 2012 and 2023 2 3 4 5 References edit nbsp The Wikibook Historical Geology has a page on the topic of Other isochron methods a b c McCulloch M T Wasserburg G J 1978 Sm Nd and Rb Sr Chronology of Continental Crust Formation Science 200 4345 1003 11 Bibcode 1978Sci 200 1003M doi 10 1126 science 200 4345 1003 PMID 17740673 S2CID 40675318 Kinoshita N Paul M Kashiv Y Collon P Deibel C M DiGiovine B Greene J P Henderson D J Jiang C L Marley S T Nakanishi T Pardo R C Rehm K E Robertson D Scott R Schmitt C Tang X D Vondrasek R Yokoyama A 30 March 2012 A Shorter 146Sm Half Life Measured and Implications for 146Sm 142Nd Chronology in the Solar System Science 335 6076 1614 1617 arXiv 1109 4805 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 1614K doi 10 1126 science 1215510 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 22461609 S2CID 206538240 Villa I M Holden N E Possolo A Ickert R B Hibbert D B Renne P R September 2020 IUPAC IUGS recommendation on the half lives of 147Sm and 146Sm Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 285 70 77 doi 10 1016 j gca 2020 06 022 ISSN 0016 7037 Kinoshita N Paul M Kashiv Y Collon P Deibel C M DiGiovine B Greene J P Jiang C L Marley S T Pardo R C Rehm K E Robertson D Scott R Schmitt C Tang X D Vondrasek R Yokoyama A 30 March 2023 Retraction Science 379 6639 1307 doi 10 1126 science adh7739 Joelving Frederik 30 March 2023 One small error for a physicist one giant blunder for planetary science Retraction Watch Retrieved 30 March 2023 a b c Depaolo D J Wasserburg G J 1976 Nd isotopic variations and petrogenetic models PDF Geophysical Research Letters 3 5 249 Bibcode 1976GeoRL 3 249D doi 10 1029 GL003i005p00249 a b Dickin A P 2005 Radiogenic Isotope Geology 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 82316 1 pp 76 77 DePaolo D J 1981 Neodymium isotopes in the Colorado Front Range and crust mantle evolution in the Proterozoic Nature 291 193 197 External links editGeochronology and Isotopes Data Portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samarium neodymium dating amp oldid 1184729271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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